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Same question here

I can`t find an oil port under the fins on mine !?!
The one at the right side of the handle is easy to locate and I used sewing machine oil.
Congratulations to your find, Robert !
 
Beautiful!!

Now thats some treasure Robert, and PANK too!

I have one of the white ones, seldom use it though as I am not a hand mixer fan.
 
The Other Under

You are right, the oil port is above the fin on the right side. The hole leads directly to the bushing so it isn't as difficult to lubricate as the larger stand mixer. Most any oil is fine. I use WD40 or any spray lubricant with silicone or teflon since I'm able to use the small tube and insert enough oil into the port to do some good.
The smell in the Sunbeam Jr is ozone from the brushes spinning on the armature. Many of the older mixers give off a cobination of ozone and warmed oil and grease and many say it is a nostalgic scent.
Kelly
 
Oh, NO, four dollars is NOT a lot for the mixer, when you take into consideration how horrible, wimpy, and throwaway the new ones are now, even the Krups ones and the like!

What's strange is, if you look at the ridged cap on the Wisk bottle, they never really "updated" them when they brought in the plastic red bottles they used until only a few years ago (they also used them on the small "All" bottles! I guess they figured, why mess with a good thing?

My kitchen for a decent dish detergent that doesn't strip my hands!

Do the ingredients lose strength over time?
 
Do the ingredients lose strength over time?

I have not found that to be the case, and the vintage detergents work really well because of all the phosphates.
 
You dirty dog!

You have quite a knack for finding goodies.

Know what would put that to good use? First make an angel cake or some flavor of a chiffon cake (from scratch, of course) using your stand mixer.

Then, get out the double boiler, and use the hand mixer to make some seven-minute frosting to slather on it.

Best part of it is that as cakes go, that one would be relatively benign in terms of fat and sugar.
 
Easy & Minute Frosting

1 cup white Karo
12 large marshmellows
In a saucepan over low heat melt the marshmellows into the syrup.
In the small mixer bowl whip:
3 eggs whites
Slowly pour melted marshmellows over the egg whites while beating constantly. Add:
1 tsp vanilla
Whip until ready to spread.
 
Very nice find! I found a barely used pink one a few years back in Arizona. I don't have the box, but then it was only $2 (LOL).

Yes Polkanut the twin cities does have quite the estate sales, as we can see, there are still a few good treasures to be found!
 
Best part of it is that as cakes go, that one would be relatively benign in terms of fat and sugar.

Hi Steve, I make 7 minute double boiler frosting all the time using the white Mixmaster Junior. But during the weekends we go all out with fat and sugar, so bring it on, no low fat nothing Friday night-Sunday night. We are very diligent about eating healthy during the work week. Mon-Fri it's fat-free cottage cheese, vegtables, fruits, fish, protein shakes and no extra fat or sugar. Then on Friday night all hell breaks loose! This past Friday evening we had Jucy Lucys and a huge basket of onion rings, and stopped off for ice cream after that, mmmmmmmmmmmm! It was soooo good as I'm always just starving by Friday night for something naughty.
 
Waht's Jucy Lucys?

When my sister would made the double boiler 7 minute icing, she'd put all sorts of different degrees of food coloring in it for different pretty colors.
 
Waht's Jucy Lucys?

I looked it up on the net, apparently its a local delcacy, which I didn't realize until just now.

In brief, you take a large amount of cheese and sandwich it between two patties of ground beef. After carefully sealing the edges, you grill what basically becomes a big beef/cheese jelly doughnut. Slap it on a bun with some pickles and onions, and color me bad, you got yourself a meal fit for a king. Albeit kind of chubby king. And no, they don't come in ground turkey."

YUM YUM

http://www.doodledee.com/jucylucy/
 
OK, THAT'S IT. Next time I'm in Minnie, we goin' to have one of those durijng estate sale wnderings!! Hmm, I may try to make one of these once a year lol. Uhh, how big a hunk a cheese? Me thinks bubba would like this an aweful lot!!
 
That Jucy Lucy sounds awfully good...

All that melted cheese and hamburger grease all mixed together and squirting into your mouth with each bite...

Guess I'll have to get one the next time I'm in Minneapolis.

Should we start a thread about local food color?

St. Louis has two local color foods: brain sandwiches and toasted ravioli. Brain sandwiches were big with the World War II generation. Cow brains breaded and deep fried, served on rye with mustard. There were several taverns that served them. However, the owners retired or passed away, and then Mad Cow disease finally brought it all to an end. Toasted ravioli still exists -- ravioli breaded with bread crumbs, parmesan and parsley, then deep fried.

Cincinnati, where I grew up, had three that I can think of. First, chili invented by Greek immigrants -- it's spiced up with cinnamon and unsweetened chocolate (see the Joy of Cooking for the recipe). Second, turtle soup (also spiced up with cinnamon). Third, goetta (pronounced get-ta). Oh, I almost forgot. The chili is served on top of spaghetti with small red beans, onions if you wish, and a mountain of shredded mild cheddar cheese. Skyline Chili is the most famous chili parlor. Some people like to eat leftover cold Skyline chili for breakfast instead of cold pizza. Goetta is a pull-out-all-the-stops fat fest. Sounds gross but it's unbelievably good. It's a take-off on Pennsylvania Dutch Scrapple, except that it's made with pinhead oats (a.k.a. steel cut oats). Here's the deal. It's not kosher. Put a 4-pound pork shoulder roast (a.k.a. a callie) and about a pound of beef short ribs in a stock pot with almost enough water to cover and a big quartered onion or two. Simmer that several hours until the meat is falling off the bones. Discard the bones. Put the meat, fat and onion through a grinder and then dump it back into that greasy water. It should have a good half inch of grease floating on top if not more. Then add a pound or so of pin head oats, and cook over low heat until the oats are done and it gets thick. (Gotta be pin head or steel cut oats, not Quaker rolled oats, which would simply turn into a pot of goop. John McCann's steel cut oats work best. $6 for a can, but worth every cent. Also good simply as a hot cereal. Bob's Red Mill steel cut oats will also do). Anyway...Then season with LOTS of salt, pepper, MSG, and, if you want, sage. You want it to taste very spicy. Pour that into a loaf pan and refrigerate overnight. Next morning it will be set. Then slice it and fry it. You have to fry it slowly a good 10 minutes or more on each side until it gets really brown and crispy. It tastes best when you fry it in a cast iron skillet. It's awesome stuff. Once I was making it when the HVAC service man came. After awhile, he came in the kitchen and said, "You know, I don't know what you're cooking in that stock pot, but it sure smells awfully good." I explained. The enthusiasm drained from his face. He said, "Oh my god! That's a heart attack waiting to happen!" Well, you just make a batch once a year, enjoy a couple slices of it, share the rest with friends or family, and that's it.
 
Grams makes scrapple..Its gross...
Have had the chili, thats good eatin.. We make it similarly, but with out the choclate..

Brain makes me wanna barf, so lets move on

The toasted ravaoli sounds scrumptous, although some here wouldn;t cook it due to the liablitys of frying...
 
OMG !

Good for you Robert, you really have an eye for this.

I suggest Singer Sewing Machine Oil or other high quality refined oil. Something that won't evaporate over time and leave behind alot gunk in the parts.
 
I L O V E Scrapple!

I guess I am the only one here who does...LOL

Never knew what it was til I live in Maryland.

Found a market here that carries it. Bought several blocks of it and froze them. Still not as good as what I got from the Chesapeake Bay Area.

Man, wished I had some now. It's defineately an aquired taste.
 
Goetta in my humble opinion shouldn't be sliced/fried, it should be chopped and fried (kind of like hash browns or corned beef hash). It's good (the oats get nice and crispy(.

Also you need the right kind of pinhead oats....Dorsel's Pinhead Oatmeal from somewhere in Northern Kentucky (the one with Dottie Dorsel on the package :)
 
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